White on Sotiropoulos: He’s Fought His Way into 155 Title Hunt

George
Sotiropoulos won a unanimous decision Saturday in a lightweight
main-card bout at UFC
116, but he didn’t sound entirely happy with his impressive
performance.

Mainly, he sounded relieved.

“I’m happy that I won,” Sotiropoulos said. “I wasn’t happy with
what happened at the end of the last round.”

What happened at the end of the third round was opponent Kurt
Pellegrino dropped Sotiropoulos with a knee and tried to finish
him on the ground. Time ran out, though, and Sotiropoulos survived
to win the decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28). The victory improved his
record to 6-0 in the UFC and 13-2 overall.

“I think he had to come out hard in that last round and perform
because he was definitely down (after) the first two rounds,”
Sotiropoulos said. “I made a mistake, and he capitalized. I’m
really happy. It’s a lot of pressure off my back right now.”

Knowing he was up on the scorecards influenced Sotiropoulos’
strategy for the third round.

“I didn’t want to rush in there and make any stupid mistakes,” he
said. “I was cautious. It’s something I’ve worked a lot with my
boxing, wrestling and jiu-jitsu trainers -- you know, rushing in is
a flaw. It can get you into a bad situation. It’s something we
talked a lot about. With Kurt, in a lot of his other fights with
guys who rush in, he’s able to capitalize. I didn’t want to give
him that opportunity. I was playing it smart.”

The win no doubt advances Sotiropoulos in the UFC lightweight title
picture. Division champion Frankie
Edgar rematches B.J. Penn on
Aug. 28 in Boston, and Sotiropoulos is officially in the hunt.

“I’m impressed with him,” UFC President Dana White said at the UFC
116 postfight news conference. “I was blown away with his (fight
against) Joe ‘Daddy’ Stevenson. He looked incredible tonight
against a guy I have a lot of respect for too. Kurt Pellegrino’s
awesome. (Sotiropoulos) is right there, man. He’s fought his way
into the mix, no doubt about it.”

It doesn’t hurt that Sotiropoulos is Australian either. He could
become a key figure as the UFC grows in the country.

“Australia is becoming a huge market for us. A very big market,”
White said. “Does any country make more sense than Australia? All
men’s men, tough guys. Is there a p*ssy in Australia? I don’t think
there is. It’d be hard to find one. So yeah, Australia makes a lot
of sense for us. Thank God we got a guy who’s actually really good
from Australia.”